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super wrote: I guess I answered it. Just was too lazy to type SANCTIONS
Seems that laziness extends to the counting of letters too!
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SANCTIONS it is - I liked yesterdays so much than when I posted this: Bugs and Suggestions[^] I noticed the anagram and couldn't resist!
You are up tomorrow.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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OriginalGriff wrote: SANCTIONS it is
Are you sure?
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Nope! Brain fart ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I just noticed the extra 'S' - but I'll give it to you anyway!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
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Thank you for your generosity
cheers,
Super
------------------------------------------
Too much of good is bad,mix some evil in it
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You're welcome!
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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So I wanted to draw some 3D model for my kids to see the furniture I plan to build in their rooms...
There is an older (2017) Solid installed on my wife's laptop but it is fairly complicated and I hate that laptop...
So looked for some...
I found OpenSCAD - which is not even close to a true CAD, but I actually create the model by writing a C-like script... Totally fits my need and knowledge...
I'm only wondering who was thinking that programmers need a 3D modeller...
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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Have a look at Fusion 360 - it is a true CAD system (and CAM as well) but once you getteh idea it's pretty easy to use. (This may help: Adventures in 3D printing Part 1: Fusion, you CAD![^]) There is a free "Hobbyist" license as well, which is pretty damn good for a full featured expensive product.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Look fantastic - obviously way too much for me just now... Not that I need moving parts or such - just to look at it...
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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It's actually really cool, and very quick to do simple or complex bits - I recently made a little part smaller than my thumbnail to hold the dovetail mount of my Dial Test Indicator to the head on my 3D printer so I could get the bed more accurately levelled, and it took longer to print than to design ...
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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I used that when moved to my current home to place the existing furniture and see what we need more or left behind...
Very good one indeed... but not like writing code
"The only place where Success comes before Work is in the dictionary." Vidal Sassoon, 1928 - 2012
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RickZeeland wrote: Sweet Home 3D
Is that the one written in Java?
That runtime has been banned from my systems (I refuse to install it even on a VM), so that'd be a non-starter for me...
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Java indeed, but there's also an online version, sometimes you have to take risks
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I have been using SketchUp[^] from the days when it was a high priced application (somewhere around 350 USD, 15+ years ago), through the years when Google provided it for free, and I am still using it. Today, you have two choices: Either buying a subscription (no one-time-fee option), or a web version. I detest web based software, so I stick to the last freely available one, "Sketchup Make 2017" - google that, and you will find lots of sites from which it can be downloaded.
It takes a little effort to learn to use it properly, but once you learn it, you can easily make some really impressing drawings. And there is a huge library of 3D components - lots of makers of furniture, machinery, tools or whathaveyou have made SketchUp models of their products as a way to market them. Plus zillions of components made by SketchUp users.
SketchUp is a sketching tool - not a CAD/CAM tool. It is for showing the carpenter (or whatever sort of craftsman) how you want it to be when completed, not to tell him how to build it. I am in the middle of a process to prepare 30-40 "slides" to show the entrepreneur how I want the remodeling of my house to be. For that use, SketchUp is great.
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Perhaps something for a survey...
With so many options how do you choose what languages and frameworks you learn?
Do you just learn and use whatever is used where you work? Do you have a say in the matter? E.g. when starting a new project can you use whatever you want to get the job done or is there a specified language you have to use?
Do you learn something new because it's popular / in demand in the job market?
For personal projects... maybe just because it looks cool or useful?
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Jacquers wrote: Do you just learn and use whatever is used where you work? Do you have a say in the matter? E.g. when starting a new project can you use whatever you want to get the job done or is there a specified language you have to use?
I get to choose, but it has to meet requirements so you end up with limited choice anyway. For example, if you need to make a web application, then you can't just choose a native Android app on the basis it is interesting... because it just wont meet requirements.
Jacquers wrote: Do you learn something new because it's popular / in demand in the job market?
Depends. If I was looking for a new job, or my current skillset appears to be dropping off the market at an alarming rate, then yes - learn what is in demand. Learning just the fun stuff is for people who have other (non-coding) ways to pay the bills.
Jacquers wrote: For personal projects... maybe just because it looks cool or useful?
If I want it done fast, use what I already know. If I have plenty of time, then maybe look at something new... or more realistically, just pretend to have ambitions to making all the awesome personal projects I come up with but really just do other non-coding things with my spare time instead.
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I'm very biased, so first off, I don't learn new things just because the blog-sphere and rags start raving about some new language or framework.
Second, I love C# and I have absolutely no reason to use anything else, not even Python anymore as C# with .NET Core runs on my rPi's.
Third, I've ditched jQuery, Bootstrap, and am pretty much biased against any of those frameworks like Angular, React, Vue, etc., because frankly, it's not rocket science to "get stuff done." I don't need bloat to "get stuff done."
So for client-side development, I use TypeScript and that's about it. If I want a nice UI I'll use jqWidgets[^] but without all that framework support.
For work I have to use ExtJS and am happy to use Angular, but for personal projects, I am highly opinionated and find no reason to "simplify" my coding with "complexity." The reason should be obvious.
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Try Sveltejs. Might open you up to something new.
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Of course, whatever matches best your high level view of things.
I prefer logic programming, which means safe, declarative programming in the broader terms.
So, now I'm going throu Rust apprenticeship, enjoying safety, functional programming at 0 cost, Wasm, multithreading, reactive GUIs, and more. IMHO, it's *the* language worth the effort.
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What to learn?
I watch the local job market, keeping a mental list of the in-demand skills. I learned a long time ago that desired skill sets vary by area, and skills in-demand elsewhere don't help me. I don't bother with anything that will not provide a financial return on my investment in learning time.
Blogs are mostly opinion pieces that cherry pick "facts" to back up their points. I read some, but they never have the same importance as the local job boards.
Do I sound mercenary? I'm not, just financially responsible. I have learned to truly enjoy luxuries such as eating and living in a home, so ensuring I'm employed is top priority.
Technologies at work?
Mostly I've had an influence on what technologies were used. If I didn't think a given technology would be useful going forward, I found slots which used technologies that I thought would be. [Not that I haven't guessed wrong -- on those days my Magic Eight Ball was cloudy and told me to try again the next day.]
Side projects?
Side projects fill two needs for me: 1) keeping my mind engaged in something I like doing, and 2) learning new technologies. I have lost track of the number of languages I learned, and learning new languages lost its magic a long time ago. However, learning what I can do with a language (for fun or profit) continues to be important.
I have written an address book application a dozen times in various technologies. I know the requirements by heart and it includes the important concepts (UI, DB, business layer, etc.) for learning a new technology.
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I personally go first and foremost with what makes the most sense for the task going for maturity, ease of use over popularity. And an overall stability of the ecosystem.
Were I, for example, to do web frontend stuff, I wouldn't pick the some JS framework du jour but would go with something more stable (and I guess less exciting) such as TypeScript or Blazor. Granted, the latter is kinda new and fast-moving, but it's foundation in C# is solid.
For dekstop development, my current choice during work hours is Delphi. It's got the advantage of not requring a separate runtime (which is an important topic when delivering software), but it's mature and modern as a language (with C++ catching up only slowly) and it got a, once again, mature and easy to use, UI framework integrated.
Although I'd start the next project with C# because it IS a better language, still got a good UI framework and the runtime requirement is getting less important as .NET gets included in latter Windows versions (with C# binaries running cross-platform should that need arise later).
The next topic I can think of is systems programming. There, I'd leave my old-and-tried-mantra because that whole "tried" part is, less important than safety which is IMHO actually way more important in systems programming than in high-level user-facing stuff. C is tried all right, but it's a nightmare to do anything productive with whereas Rust excludes heaps of bugs by language design and the compiled binaries are both compact and run fast making Rust my language-to-learn the moment I got to do anything low-level.
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I have been most fortunate in this respect.
As it turns out, I've always been able to just learn something because it seemed useful and the the fortunate part kicks in: it seems to be just what's needed where I work.
C, C++, ODBC for Excel, web development, and others. At least I prefer to think of it as luck, although clairvoyance wouldn't be found offensive.
Ravings en masse^ |
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"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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